Strings.FormatDateTime(DateTime, DateFormat) Method
Definition
Important
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Returns a string expression representing a date/time value.
public static string FormatDateTime (DateTime Expression, Microsoft.VisualBasic.DateFormat NamedFormat = Microsoft.VisualBasic.DateFormat.GeneralDate);
static member FormatDateTime : DateTime * Microsoft.VisualBasic.DateFormat -> string
Public Function FormatDateTime (Expression As DateTime, Optional NamedFormat As DateFormat = Microsoft.VisualBasic.DateFormat.GeneralDate) As String
Parameters
- Expression
- DateTime
Required. Date
expression to be formatted.
- NamedFormat
- DateFormat
Optional. Numeric value that indicates the date/time format used. If omitted, DateFormat.GeneralDate
is used.
Returns
A string expression representing a date/time value.
Exceptions
NamedFormat
setting is not valid.
Examples
This example demonstrates the use of the FormatDateTime
function.
' English (US) format.
Dim testDate As DateTime = #3/12/1999#
' FormatDateTime returns "Friday, March 12, 1999".
' The time information is neutral (00:00:00) and therefore suppressed.
Dim testString As String = FormatDateTime(testDate, DateFormat.LongDate)
Remarks
The Date
data type always contains both date and time information. For purposes of type conversion, Visual Basic considers 1/1/1 (January 1 of the year 1) to be a neutral value for the date, and 00:00:00 (midnight) to be a neutral value for the time. If you format a Date
value as a date/time string, FormatDateTime
does not include neutral values in the resulting string. For example, if you convert #1/1/0001 9:30:00# to a string, the result is "9:30:00 AM"; the date information is suppressed. However, the date information is still present in the original Date
value and can be recovered with functions such as DatePart
.
Note
If you pass the Expression
argument as a String
literal, FormatDateTime
interprets it according to the CurrentCulture setting of your application. However, if you pass it as a Date
literal, use the format #mm/dd/yyyy#, because FormatDateTime
always interprets a Date
literal according to the English (US) culture. This is necessary because, if an application is developed and coded using Date
literals from one culture, but is then executed on a platform with a different culture, the Date
literals could be parsed incorrectly.
The NamedFormat
argument has the following settings.
Constant | Description |
---|---|
DateFormat.GeneralDate |
Display a date and/or time. Display a date part as a short date. If there is a time part, display it as a long time. If present, both parts display. |
DateFormat.LongDate |
Display a date using the long date format specified in your computer's regional settings. |
DateFormat.ShortDate |
Display a date using the short date format specified in your computer's regional settings. |
DateFormat.LongTime |
Display a time using the time format specified in your computer's regional settings. |
DateFormat.ShortTime |
Display a time using the 24-hour format (hh:mm). |
Applies to
See also
- Format(Object, String)
- FormatCurrency(Object, Int32, TriState, TriState, TriState)
- FormatNumber(Object, Int32, TriState, TriState, TriState)
- FormatPercent(Object, Int32, TriState, TriState, TriState)
- ArgumentException
- DatePart(DateInterval, DateTime, FirstDayOfWeek, FirstWeekOfYear)
- String Manipulation Summary